OCTA proposal would add buses in Costa Mesa
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- A possible cross-county bus system -- touted by local
transportation authorities to save time for bus riders -- could result in
more traffic for residents, city traffic officials said Monday.
Officials from the Orange County Transportation Authority hope to
implement a cross-county rapid bus system that would run along Harbor
Boulevard from Brea to Newport Beach, passing through Fullerton, Anaheim,
Garden Grove, Santa Ana, Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. The $11-million
proposed system would skip some of the existing stops along Harbor
Boulevard and trigger green lights to make the inner-county bus ride at
least 14 minutes faster, said transportation authority spokesman George
Urch.
Implementation of the system requires a favorable vote from the Costa
Mesa City Council, and city transportation experts said they are not sure
whether they will recommend approval.
Peter Naghavi, the city’s Manager of Transportation Services, said the
system is a good idea but he is not convinced of its practicality.
Naghavi said he is concerned the signal-triggering feature of the system
will cause traffic to back up at other Costa Mesa intersections.
Busy intersections throughout the city are coordinated to provide
efficient traffic flow, he said. If a bus triggers the light for its own
needs, it could throw off other signals and result in traffic jams along
streets that run perpendicular to Harbor. Once the system is thrown off,
it takes a few cycles to get back on track, Naghavi said.
“The idea is a good idea but it has to be practical,” Naghavi said.
“If it does not hurt our traffic flow integrity, then we will support it.
If it is done at the expense of congestion to other traffic, then it is
not a good thing.”
Naghavi said he will wait and see the result of further studies and
assessments before he makes any kind of recommendation.
“The idea is a good idea; it just has to be practical,” he said.
The bus route along Harbor is particularly slow because of traffic and
the large number of bus riders, Urch said, and was therefore chosen for
the proposed rapid bus system. About 30 rapid system buses would run in
addition to the existing OCTA buses on Harbor and arrive every 10 to 12
minutes at shelters about a mile a part.
Given favorable votes in all cities, the system could start as early
as summer of next year, Urch said.
The issue has not yet been scheduled for a City Council meeting.
Naghavi said the system is still very preliminary and will not come
before the council for months, if not longer.
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